and mission affiliated with the catholic church, where 200 low income navajo children receive free education, subsidized family housing and water and in other outlying areas they provide life-sustaining services. the mission mostly survives on donations, promising to use those donations wisely, which is why what happened here between a native american mission and a major new york fund-raising firm is raising questions. four years ago, quadriga art began a fund-raising campaign on behalf of indian children. according to internal documents, quadriga has raised more than $9 million and according to those same records, almost none of the money, if any, has come back here to the mission. in fact, quadriga charged so much for its services, the school and mission went into debt more than $5 million. jay mason is the attorney for the catholic diocese in mexico which only learned of the disastrous fund-raising campaign after cnn contacted him with details. what does the diocese conclude about a company, a major fund-raising company that would somehow introduce itself into st. bonaventure charity miss